Case Reports in Ophthalmology (Sep 2010)

Graves’ Ophthalmopathy Misdiagnosed as Relapsing Conjunctivitis

  • Irini P. Chatziralli,
  • Evgenia Kanonidou,
  • Petros Keryttopoulos,
  • Dionyssia Papadopoulou,
  • Leonidas Papazisis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1159/000320582
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 2
pp. 53 – 55

Abstract

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A 59-year-old female patient presented at the outpatients’ Department of Ophthalmology with epiphora, eyelid swelling, and a foreign body feeling in the right eye. The symptoms were present for 4 months, and the patient was treated as suffering from relapsing conjunctivitis. The slit lamp examination revealed keratitis due to exposure, related with the deficient closure of the eyelids. There was a 2 mm difference in the readings with the Hertel exophthalmometry examination between the eyes. Her medical history was clear, and she was referred for computed tomography of the orbits and brain and biochemical examinations (FT3, FT4, and TSH) to investigate the presence of an intraorbital mass. FT3 was significantly increased and TSH was accordingly low, indicating the diagnosis of Graves’ disease, which presented without other signs and symptoms apart from ophthalmopathy. Computed tomography scan excluded the diagnosis of an intraorbital mass. Therefore, it is important not to underestimate the ocular manifestations of systemic diseases.

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